Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industries

<p>Abstract</p> <p>A cross sectional survey was initiated to understand the frequency of occupational injury occurrence and the associated factors in the fish processing industries of western India involving 185 randomly selected women subjects. All the subjects were interviewed wi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Saha Asim, Nag Anjali, Nag Pranab
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2006-09-01
Series:Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology
Online Access:http://www.occup-med.com/content/1/1/23
id doaj-07492f7203c14521babc44abbbb6fdc0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-07492f7203c14521babc44abbbb6fdc02020-11-25T00:20:33ZengBMCJournal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology1745-66732006-09-01112310.1186/1745-6673-1-23Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industriesSaha AsimNag AnjaliNag Pranab<p>Abstract</p> <p>A cross sectional survey was initiated to understand the frequency of occupational injury occurrence and the associated factors in the fish processing industries of western India involving 185 randomly selected women subjects. All the subjects were interviewed with the help of an interviewer-administered questionnaire to collect information regarding their personal, occupational and work related morbidity details (including details of occupational injuries). Logistic regression method was used to analyze the data in order to obtain the contribution of individual factors on occupational injuries. This study has shown that work related morbidity like blanching of hand (OR; 2.30, 95%CI; 1.12–4.74) and nature of job like grading (OR; 3.99, 95%CI; 1.41–11.27) and packing (OR; 5.68, 95%CI; 1.65–19.57) had a significant impact on injury causation. This study eventually concludes that apart from nature of job of fish processing workers occupational hazards prevailing in the work environment contribute significantly to the occurrence of work related injuries and prevention of such occupational hazards may help in protecting workers from occupational injuries also.</p> http://www.occup-med.com/content/1/1/23
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saha Asim
Nag Anjali
Nag Pranab
spellingShingle Saha Asim
Nag Anjali
Nag Pranab
Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industries
Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology
author_facet Saha Asim
Nag Anjali
Nag Pranab
author_sort Saha Asim
title Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industries
title_short Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industries
title_full Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industries
title_fullStr Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industries
title_full_unstemmed Occupational injury proneness in Indian women: A survey in fish processing industries
title_sort occupational injury proneness in indian women: a survey in fish processing industries
publisher BMC
series Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology
issn 1745-6673
publishDate 2006-09-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>A cross sectional survey was initiated to understand the frequency of occupational injury occurrence and the associated factors in the fish processing industries of western India involving 185 randomly selected women subjects. All the subjects were interviewed with the help of an interviewer-administered questionnaire to collect information regarding their personal, occupational and work related morbidity details (including details of occupational injuries). Logistic regression method was used to analyze the data in order to obtain the contribution of individual factors on occupational injuries. This study has shown that work related morbidity like blanching of hand (OR; 2.30, 95%CI; 1.12–4.74) and nature of job like grading (OR; 3.99, 95%CI; 1.41–11.27) and packing (OR; 5.68, 95%CI; 1.65–19.57) had a significant impact on injury causation. This study eventually concludes that apart from nature of job of fish processing workers occupational hazards prevailing in the work environment contribute significantly to the occurrence of work related injuries and prevention of such occupational hazards may help in protecting workers from occupational injuries also.</p>
url http://www.occup-med.com/content/1/1/23
work_keys_str_mv AT sahaasim occupationalinjurypronenessinindianwomenasurveyinfishprocessingindustries
AT naganjali occupationalinjurypronenessinindianwomenasurveyinfishprocessingindustries
AT nagpranab occupationalinjurypronenessinindianwomenasurveyinfishprocessingindustries
_version_ 1725366753323646976